He had conquered ninety per cent of the known world - 22 million square miles - by the time he was 25.
Leading his loyal armies through 22,000 miles of sieges and conquests, he grabbed territory that today would sweep from Greece to India.
He also spoke with a Dublin accent, favoured blonde highlights and showed a marked reluctance to consort with the laydeez.
Colin Farrell's take on the legend of Alexander the Great is not helped by director Oliver Stone's decision to leap-frog key points in the conqueror's life.
We first meet Al on his deathbed and are then flashed back to his childhood and adolescence under a brutal father (Kilmer) and controlling mother (a serpentine Angelina Jolie).
Next minute he's lining up his numerically inferior forces against the Persians for the momentous Battle of Gauamela (after he's already occupied half of Asia).
Then - as his ravaged forces feel their loyalty waning - we backtrack a decade or so to his crowning as Macedonian king after the assassination of his father.
Any loose ends are half-heartedly tied up in a voiceover from Anthony Hopkins as Alexander's general Ptolemy.
Stone, whose experiences as a decorated Vietnam vet made the likes of Platoon and Born on the Fourth of July compelling viewing, is slightly at sea here.
As you might expect, the battle scenes are competently handled and the gorish brutality leaves nothing to the imagination. (elephant's trunk lopped off, anyone?).
On the down side, Farrell is left with nothing much to do as most of his character-forming experiences take place off screen.
When called upon to display Al's attraction to Hephaistion (Leto), there's nothing but a couple of coy glances and a manly hug.
The decision to allow Farrell to speak in his natural brogue (with the rest of the cast slipping into Oirish out of respect) means the badinage of battle-hardened troops sounds like O'Neills at closing time.
Away from Stone's belief that this is a mentally challenging epic, it is actually a good laugh and enjoyable action romp. Just don't take it too seriously.
Tim Evans
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